Insect bites and stings

"Bug bite" redirects here. For any of various characters in the GoBots and Transformers fictional universes, see Bug Bite (Transformers).
Insect bites and stings
Aedes aegypti, the yellow fever mosquito, biting
Classification and external resources
Specialty emergency medicine
ICD-10 T14.1, X23-X25, W57
ICD-9-CM 919.4, 989.5, E905.3, E905.5, E906.4
MedlinePlus 000033
MeSH D007299

Insect bites and stings occur when an insect is agitated and seeks to defend itself through its natural defense mechanisms, or when an insect seeks to feed off the bitten person. Some insects inject formic acid, which can cause an immediate skin reaction often resulting in redness and swelling in the injured area. Stings from fire ants, bees, wasps and hornets are usually painful, and may stimulate a dangerous allergic reaction called anaphylaxis for at-risk patients, and some wasps can also have a powerful bite along with a sting. Bites from mosquitoes and fleas are more likely to cause itching than pain.

The skin reaction to insect bites and stings usually lasts for up to a few days. However, in some cases the local reaction can last for up to two years. These bites are sometimes misdiagnosed as other types of benign or cancerous lesions.[1]

Signs and symptoms

The left side of the image is showing the temperature increase caused by an insect bite after about 28 hours.
Low-magnification micrograph showing wedge-shaped perivascular inflammation (superficial dermal perivascular lymphoeosinophilic infiltrate), the histomorphologic appearance of an insect bite (H&E stain).

The reaction to a sting is of three types. The normal reaction involves the area around the bite with redness, itchiness, and pain. A large local reaction occurs when the area of swelling is greater than 5 cm. Systemic reactions are when symptoms occur in areas besides that of the bites.[2]

With insect stings a large local reaction may occur (an area of skin redness greater than 10 cm in size).[3] It can last one to two days.[3] It occurs in about 10% of those bitten.[4]

Feeding bites

Feeding bites have characteristic patterns and symptoms, a function of the feeding habits of the offending pest and the chemistry of its saliva.

Pest Preferred body part Felt at time of bite Reaction
mosquitoes exposed appendages often Low raised welt, itches several hours.
midges and no-see-ums exposed appendages usually Itches several hours.
fleas prefer ankles and bare feet usually May make red itchy welt; several days. Later bites are less severe.
biting flies (Tabanidae) any exposed skin painful and immediate Painful welt, several hours.
bed bugs appendages, neck, exposed skin usually not Low red itchy welts, usually several together resembling rash, slow to develop and can last weeks.
lice pubic area or scalp usually not Infested area intensely itchy, with red welts at bite sites.
larval ticks Anywhere on body, but prefer covered skin, crevices. Usually not; may be scratched off before they are seen. Intensely itchy red welts lasting over a week.
adult ticks covered skin, crevices, entire body usually not Itchy welt, several days. May transmit diseases

Microscopic appearance

The histomorphologic appearance of insect bites is usually characterized by a wedge-shaped superficial dermal perivascular infiltrate consisting of abundant lymphocytes and scattered eosinophils. This appearance is non-specific, i.e. it may be seen in a number of conditions including:[5]

See also

References

  1. Allen, Arthur C. (March 1948). "Persistent "Insect Bites" (Dermal Eosinophilic Granulomas) Simulating Lymphoblastomas, Histiocytoses, and Squamous Cell Carcinomas". Am J Pathol. 24 (2): 367–387. PMC 1942711Freely accessible. PMID 18904647.
  2. Goddard, Jerome (2002). Physician's guide to arthropods of medical importance. Boca Raton: CRC Press. p. 14. ISBN 0-8493-1387-2.
  3. 1 2 Ludman, SW; Boyle, RJ (2015). "Stinging insect allergy: current perspectives on venom immunotherapy.". Journal of asthma and allergy. 8: 75–86. doi:10.2147/JAA.S62288. PMC 4517515Freely accessible. PMID 26229493.
  4. Maynard, Robert J. Flanagan, Alison L. Jones ; with a section on antidotes and chemical warfare by Timothy C. Marrs and Robert L. (2003). Antidotes. London: Taylor & Francis. p. 118. ISBN 9780203485071. Retrieved 7 June 2016.
  5. Alsaad, KO.; Ghazarian, D. (Dec 2005). "My approach to superficial inflammatory dermatoses.". J Clin Pathol. 58 (12): 1233–41. doi:10.1136/jcp.2005.027151. PMC 1770784Freely accessible. PMID 16311340.
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